Eve’s Rib-Katharine Hepburn And Spencer
Tracy’s “Adams Rib” (1949)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam Lowell
Adam’s Rib, starring Katharine Hepburn,
Spencer Tracy, Judy Holliday, directed by George Cukor, written by Ruth Gordon
and Garson Kanin 1949
Now that we are deep into the “third
wave” of women’s liberation (except mostly noticeably these days that glass
ceiling still hovering over the White House) it is a nice touch to see that
even if in a comic way the question of woman’s equality before the law, before
society norms was being addressed after the “first wave” early in the century (women
getting the vote and other legal rights like owning property in their own
name). Although we today might cringe a little at some of the dialogue and some
of the social expectations no matter how high-minded this film, Adam’s Rib, starring Katharine Hepburn
and Spencer Tracy two unmarried off-screen lovers in an age when that status was
frowned upon, is a rather nice for the time look at the double standard between
men and women (of which there is still plenty of residue.)
Here’s the premise being worked out. Then
if a guy cheated on his wife with some floozy that was “not nice” but if a wife
decided to do something about the matter-say, as here, take a rooty-toot-toot
gun and blast the creep (and take shots at his floozy as well) that was
terrible. Hang her, hang her high. That double standard implied that the guy
could get away with anything while the poor wife has to suffer and grin and
bear it. Of course in Adam’s Rib where
the two main characters, Adam, played by Spencer Tracy, and Amanda, played by Katharine
Hepburn are both married and lawyers (by the way then woman lawyers were unlike
today sparse, very sparse on the ground) you know from minute one that they
will be locking horns with each other over their respective views of what was
right in the case. So married to each other writers Ruth Gordon and Garson
Kanin have set the stage for a battle royal between the two views on display-
Adam’s stern if blind-eyed justice demanding a conviction against Amanda’s fight
against the double standard and an acquittal.
As the gloves come off-you know of
course that Adam, a crack prosecutor, and Amanda who has wangled her way into defending
the scorned woman, Doris, played by Judy Holliday are going to go for broke to
win the case. The law, the stern law would seem to be on Adam’s side since
Doris freely confessed that she plotted to pop her man for his infidelities.
But Amanda throws plenty of monkey wrenches into the mix, including ticking
Adam off when she brings in a female weight-lifter who lifts him over her head
to prove the general point that a woman can do what a man can do. Needless to
say Amanda wins the day.
But that is not the whole story-not a
1940s whole story which is moreover billed as a romantic comedy even if it is
now a proto-feminist classic. The wrangling between Adam and Amanda in the court
case had frayed their own marriage and Adam decided he had had it and flew the
coop-was looking for the divorce court. Maybe by his lights he was right to
blow town once Amanda bested him but when the deal went down he and Amanda loved
each other and so that was that. After all this was Hollywood-first wave or not.
The film’s plot-line would make little sense today but as a snapshot about the
battle between the sexes and the social mores of the time before the “second wave”
of the 1970s changed many things it is worth a view. And to see Hepburn and
Tracy go through their paces too.
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